27 Barb. 556 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1858
The only question presented upon this appeal is, whether under our statute a will can he properly executed without being attested by the actual sign manual of the testator. The statute of frauds and perjuries, of the 29th of Charles 2, ch. 3, declared that “all devises of lands and tenements should not only be in writing but signed by the testator or some other person in his presence and by his express directions, and be subscribed in his presence by three or more credible witnesses.” This statute was re-enacted in this state after the revolution, and remained the law until the revision of 1830. (1 Rev. Laws of 1813, p. 364, §2.)
The revisers proposed to re-enact this statute precisely as it stood, in substance, and reported a section for that purpose, and also reported an additional section which was enacted as reported, and was numbered 33 in the first edition of the statute, and is now section 41 of the fourth edition. Instead of enacting section 5 of the revisers’ report, the legislature substituted the present section, number 32, in the first edition of the statutes, which is as follows: Sec. 32. “Every last will and testament of real or personal property, or both, shall be executed and attested in the following manner: 1st. It shall be subscribed by the testator, at the end of the will. 2d. Such subscription shall be made by the testator in the presence of each of the attesting witnesses, or shall be acknowledged by him to have been so made, to each of the attesting witnesses. 3d. The testator, at the time of making such sub
If, therefore, the subscription of the testator’s name in Ms presence and by his express directions, to a will, was ever iq
But the counsel for the appellant also insists that a will must be personally signed by the testator, and cannot be executed by an agent; that while all other deeds and contracts or instruments in writing may be executed by an agent, wills cannot be so executed. If this be so, it is, I think, a mistake, to regard a will to which the testator’s name is subscribed by another person in his presence and by his express directions, as executed by an agent. ■ What is done for a man in his presence and by his express directions, is his act and deed. If a man tells his wife or his son, or any other person, to put his name to a deed or promissory note, and it is done in his presence and in pursuance of such directions, it is well executed by him. Such execution, not being in his handwriting, would of course require proof of such authority and directions and manner of execution. To meet this necessity in respect to wills, said section 33 requires that “ every person who shall sign the testator’s name to any will, by his direction, shall write his own name as a witness to the will.” Such an execution of a will is not done by an agent. It is done by the testator himself.
Upon the point in question, I think the law in regard to the execution of wills remains as it is, in England, and as it was in this state before the revision of 1830; except that a subscription at the end of the will is substituted for a signing, and a provision made for acknowledging and publishing the will, and the number of witnesses is reduced from three to two. That no other alte-ation was intended by the legislature at the time of the revision; and that the execution of the will in this case in the manner stated in the case, as it would have been clearly valid before 1830, is valid still, under the present
Johnson, Welles and Smith, Justices.]
Decree affirmed.